![]() ![]() Mesmerizing descriptions of desert and drought, musings over the significance of turquoise, concern over environmental destruction, harrowing personal struggles, and haunting revelations of spiritual forces converge in a provocative and numinous memoir that backs Silko’s resounding perception that “in the Americas, the sacred surrounds us, no matter how damaged or changed a place may appear to be. Vivid portraits of her grandmothers and mother are matched by amazing tales of the animal members of Silko’s extended family, from horses and dogs to macaws and rattlesnakes. She digs even deeper in this richly veined, dramatic, and mysterious self-portrait, telling gripping stories of suffering and wisdom from each branch of her complex family tree that reveal the consequences of racism, the war against Native Americans, and the abuse of nature, including shocking glimpses into the Indian slave trade and the dire effects of the atomic bomb tests and uranium mining. In Leslie Marmon Silkos novel Ceremony, originally published in 1977, the protagonist, Tayo is a World War II veteran who has returned to his Laguna Pueblo. Nevertheless, it was the singular achievement of Ceremony that first secured her a place among the first rank of Native American novelists. ![]() A MacArthur fellow, Silko drew on her Laguna Pueblo, Cherokee, Mexican, and European ancestry in her previous books, including her seminal novels Ceremony (1978) and Gardens in the Dunes (1999). ![]() ![]() The turquoise stones Silko finds in the Tucson Mountains near her home embody the story of the land and her own complex heritage. ![]()
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